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- <text id=94TT0047>
- <title>
- Jan. 17, 1994: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 17, 1994 Genetics:The Future Is Now
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 28
- Why Clinton Blew His Cool
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> "I am shocked!" Bill Clinton fairly screamed at me last Wednesday
- at the White House. "I am pissed off. There was no decision
- by me. It never came to the Oval Office. I'm going to find out
- what happened, why it happened, and then we'll see."
- </p>
- <p> Within hours of that explosion, the Administration affirmed
- the policy that had so exercised the President, a Health and
- Human Services Department order directing the states to help
- pay for abortions for low-income women in cases of rape or incest.
- The states, including many that finance abortions liberally,
- are in an uproar over it. They contend that the Federal Government
- should only rarely dictate rules to the states and that serious
- consultation should take place when such mandates are considered--as one of the President's own Executive Orders directs. Beyond
- the absence of dialogue--HHS's bolt came without warning and
- flew in the face of earlier Administration assertions promising
- the states "flexibility" on abortion-funding questions--what
- overlays this latest abortion-rights battle is the tug between
- two Clinton beliefs that have come into conflict: freedom of
- choice and states' rights.
- </p>
- <p> While the President wants abortion covered in his health-care
- reform bill, he is also an ardent champion of states' prerogatives.
- "I've always been ambivalent on the federal-funding issue,"
- Clinton told me in January 1991. "All Roe v. Wade said is that
- the government shall not take a position on abortion. [The
- Supreme Court] guaranteed the right to have one but didn't
- get into money matters. Many people view abortion as murder,
- and even many who don't are against their tax dollars' being
- used to finance it, regardless of the circumstances. The fact
- is, there are lots of rights, like the right to travel, that
- are not exercised equally because there is no governmental obligation
- to provide everyone with money so they can all travel to the
- same degree as everyone else. Abortion is in this category.
- Guarantee the right, but leave the question of who pays largely
- to the states."
- </p>
- <p> The story of why the White House is now supporting a dramatic
- exception to Clinton's philosophy is a tale of bureaucratic
- intrigue, complete with bitter recriminations between the White
- House and HHS. The tale began late on Dec. 23. Congress had
- earlier allowed for the possibility of federally funded abortions
- in the cases of rape and incest, an expansion of its long-standing
- mandate to pay when the mother's life is endangered. After dawdling
- for months, HHS decided that the new law meant states must fund
- such abortions or risk losing their Medicaid dollars--a legal
- interpretation other Administration lawyers dispute. As procedure
- dictates, a draft directive was faxed to the offices of White
- House Cabinet Secretary Christine Varney and domestic policy
- chief Carol Rasco. Almost everyone, including the President,
- had left for Christmas vacation, and the proposed order sat
- unread. "In fact," says a White House aide, "Carol never got
- it at all." Not so, counters an HHS official, "and we've got
- the fax receipts to prove it." No matter. Everyone knew what
- was up on Christmas Day, when the HHS proposal was the lead
- story in the Washington Post. Clinton, says an aide, "was as
- angry as I've ever seen him."
- </p>
- <p> The problem then became political. " HHS boxed us in," explains
- a White House official. "We were forced to go along with their
- draft. If we knocked down HHS and conformed to the President's
- views on states' rights, there'd be a second story saying we
- were restricting abortion, and one of our major constituencies
- would go nuts." As for motivation, White House aides see little
- mystery. " HHS has its own agenda," says a Clinton adviser.
- "It's full of abortion-rights ideologues who don't understand
- we're moving this issue their way as fast as we can and in a
- way that can actually change things. By that news leak, which
- clearly came from HHS, they couldn't have screwed the President
- any better."
- </p>
- <p> Nonsense, says an HHS official. "The White House had its bite
- at the apple. They could have changed our order even after the
- Post story." "Yeah, right," says a White House aide sarcastically.
- "That would have been smart politics? They knew what they were
- doing. This is the most sensitive issue in the country. They
- tried to sneak it by us without a serious round-table discussion,
- which it obviously demanded, and they succeeded. We've tried
- to keep a lid on abortion stuff so we could fight one fight
- on it, in the health-reform debate. Now they've made that harder.
- You tell me who at HHS said they gave us time to consider having
- the decision come out the other way, and I'll kill him."
- </p>
- <p> When HHS's decision was reaffirmed last week in another letter
- to the states following my discussion with Clinton, the President
- still "did not sign off on it," says a White House aide. "It's
- been Tension City here with the Whitewater thing. The people
- who have known the President longest made a decision not to
- involve him. They didn't want to hear him go crazy again. God
- knows what might happen later. He still might decide to roll
- the damn thing back. It depends on how he judges the effects
- on health reform, which is the whole ball game for us. Like
- most stories around here, this one may never be over."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-